Maybe the first question is what your budget is, both regarding money and time. For example, you could buy a pre-configured NAS from Synology or QNAP, which requires less technical skills but more money, or a home-made solution reusing used components (but fresh disks for reliability). Depending on your electricity costs, you may want to choose a low-power solution or something which you power off when not used. For storage, maybe a three-disk RAID5 is a good compromise. For backups, plain S3 cloud storage encrypted via restic is a good idea.
thfi
Those of us who remember ‘Alf’ may wonder if the name is due to taste as well.
Well, you have Finland in the north-east, Ireland in the north-west, and every land border faces a Euro-zone country. Few other countries can claim the latter.
Those would be harvested to train LLMs even without asking first. 😐
Qt (the one used by KDE) has progressed not only through a number of owners (Trolltech, Digia, Nokia, …), but also licenses such as the QPL to be triple-licensed under GPL, LGPL, and commercial for most of its components.
Mal als Beispiel wie das in anderen Ländern (Schweden) gemacht wird:
Das da ein freundlich-lächelnder Mann in rot steht, ist nur fürs Pressefoto. Normalerweise Selbstbedienung. Der ganze Apparat kan in der Höhe eingestellt werden. Vorne die Fläche ist für eine digitale Unterschrift, die auf die Karte gedruckt wird. Bezahlt wird dann per Bank/Kreditkarte. Alles papierlos.
The "C" in the progress bar is alternating between "c" and "C" to give the impression of munching.
There is some information missing in the problem description. For example, if you close the lid, does the computer suspend/sleep/hibernate? It may be that when the computer sleeps something "breaks" or it may be that the act of physically closing/opening the lid has an effect (e.g. because the WiFi antenna is embedded in the display frame).
Some time ago I had a similar problem with Tailscale and sleeping. When Tailscale initializes itself (at boot), it has to interact with another service to communicate which DNS servers have become available (e.g. 100.100.100.100). Several implementations of such services exist (resolvconf, openresolv), in my case systemd-resolved. During normal operation, resolvectl status
(if using systemd-resolved) shows which DNS servers and which search domains are configured for each network interface such as tailscale0
. Now, there is a bug (or feature) that systemd-resolved "forgets" the DNS configuration it got from Tailscale when the computer is put to sleep. So, when the computer wakes up, name resolution via Tailscale no longer works, giving you the impression that Tailscale itself is not working, although Tailscale's low-level functions are still operational.
My "solution" was to write a small script that gets executed when the computer wakes up which sets again DNS server and search domain for network device tailscale0
.
ArchLinux's pacman with ILoveCandy option enabled.
Wenn das mit den Windräder und Strompreisen so stimmt, muss das geändert werden. Ich habe anderswo gelesen, daß Studien gezeigt haben (keine Quelle zur Hand), daß die Akzeptanz steigt wenn die lokale Bevölkerung direkt davon profitiert, z.B. durch Pachteinnahmen. Wenn dann da eine Plakette hängt mit „diese Schule wurde mit Einnahmen von Windrädern renoviert“, klappt es auch mit der Akzeptanz.
Yes, XMPP with proper TLS on the server side and Conversations or one of its forks (preferably fetched from F-Droid) using OMEMO encryption should be good enough. If you are brave or paranoid, give Tox a try: https://tox.chat/